Definition of Conventing

1. Verb. (present participle of convent) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Conventing

1. convent [v] - See also: convent

Lexicographical Neighbors of Conventing

convenient
convenientia
conveniently
convenientness
convening
convenor
convenors
convent
convented
conventical
conventicle
conventicler
conventiclers
conventicles
conventicling
conventing
convention
convention bump
convention state
conventional
conventional PCI
conventional animal
conventional forest products
conventional memory
conventional mortgage loan
conventional signs
conventional tomography
conventional war
conventional warfare
conventional wars

Literary usage of Conventing

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The English Church in the Sixteenth Century from the Accession of Henry VIII by James Gairdner (1904)
"He called the dean of his chapel, Dr. Vesey or Voysey, afterwards Bishop of Exeter, and desired him on his allegiance to say whether the conventing of ..."

2. Fox's Book of Martyrs: The Acts and Monuments of the Church by John Foxe, John Cumming (1844)
"And not only that, but also the said Pope Gregory (conventing with the citizens of Rome) so agreed with them, that if they would join with him in ..."

3. The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe: With a Life of the Martyrologist, and by John Foxe, George Townsend (1844)
"Instead of a " Mandate for the conventing of the council," it is a Process eon- sequent upon the council : it is so called in the Register (Wilkins, ..."

4. Lollardy and the Reformation in England: An Historical Survey by James Gairdner (1908)
"... and said he was very far from seeking to impair the royal authority; but Standish had attempted to justify the conventing of clerks before lay judges, ..."

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